"It's a telling book about a special human being, a Midrash on a life of the mind, and I recommend it without reserve." - Rex Murphy, The Globe and Mail

"What promised to be a classic, a different diaspora's more cerebral answer to Nabokov's Speak, Memory, has become an incoherent, broken book, an early draft mistakenly, perhaps unkindly, published." - John Dugdale, The Guardian

"Errata is a much better book than it could have been." - Thomas Hove, Review of Cont. Fiction

"To admirers of Steiner (the only people likely to pick it up to begin with), Errata is bound to disappoint and embarrass." - Scott McLemee, Salon

"But the question most likely to glare in the mind of the reader who has just finished Errata will be why did Steiner write it ?" - Kenneth Baker, San Francisco Chronicle

Please note that these ratings solely represent the complete review's biased interpretation and subjective opinion of the actual reviews and do not claim to accurately reflect or represent the views of the reviewers.
Similarly the illustrative quotes chosen here are merely those the complete review subjectively believes represent the tenor and judgment of the review as a whole. We acknowledge (and remind and warn you) that they may, in fact, be entirely unrepresentative of the actual reviews by any other measure.

Our admiration for George Steiner is great.
A fine thinker, a great writer, we always look forward to his literary efforts.
His multicultural, trilingual background, his career -- that has seen him hold positions at both The Economist and The New Yorker, as well as academic chairs at Oxford and Geneva --, his intellectual interests and pursuits, all make for a fascinating figure.
The eagerly awaited autobiography held the promise of offering greater insight into the man.
Ah, but as so often with promises .....
Humbly titled Errata Steiner's book purports to be "an examined life."
A relatively short account, it does cover much of his life and what has influenced him, framing the intellectual and philosophical questions that concern him in an autobiographical manner.
Absent, however, is the rigor we are used to in Steiner's work.
This autobiographical study is a casual piece, Steiner's self-consciousness and proximity to his subject hampering the text.
He means to be honest and straightforward, but remains highly selective in what he reveals.
Turning to questions of language, religion, literature, culture he (briefly) does what he does best, but the asides (which at times want to overwhelm the text) fit uneasily in the autobiographical work.
There are enough striking moments.
"One of the doctors assisting at my awkward birth then returned to Louisiana to assassinate Huey Long," he writes.
Steiner lived a turbulent life in turbulent times, and he lived it well.
Nevertheless, the uneasy mix he has chosen for this book leaves it unsatisfactory.
Even his prose, which we enjoy so in both his essays and his fiction, falls short here, at turns trying to be evocative (in imitative pastiches), sentimental, or -- too rarely -- dispassionate.
We would like to know more about the man George Steiner, and we had hoped to find it here.
He tries to be revealing, but it is too obvious that too much is also concealed here.
He will have a true biographer some day.
In the mean time, we hope he returns to writing pieces more suited to his style.

It is a curious book, and we can really only recommend it to those with a greater interest in Mr. Steiner -- with the warning that they will not find what they seek here.